The class String

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Transcript The class String

CHAPTER 6
GC 101
Strings
1
THE CLASS STRING
 Contains operations to manipulate strings.
 String:

Sequence of zero or more characters.

Enclosed in double quotation marks.

Is processed as a single unit .

Null or empty strings have no characters. “ “

Every character has a relative position , the first character is in position 0 .
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THE CLASS STRING

Java system automatically makes the class String available (i.e no need to import this class )

Example :
String name = "text";
String name = expression;

Examples:
String name = "Marla Singer";
int x = 3;
int y = 5;
String point = "(" + x + ", " + y + ")";
Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition
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INDEXES

Characters of a string are numbered with 0-based indexes:
String name = "P. Diddy";
index
0
1
char
P
.
2
3
4
5
6
7
D
i
d
d
y
 The first character's index is always 0
 The last character's index is 1 less than the string's length
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THE CLASS STRING
 Length of the string is the number of characters in it .
 When determining the length of a string , blanks count .
 Example :
 “ “  has length = 0
 “abc”  has length = 3 , position of a = 0 ,b= 1 , c= 2
 “a boy”  has length = 5
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STRING OPERATIONS
 The length() method returns the length of the string.
Eg:
System.out.println(“Hello”.length()); // prints 5
 The + operator is used to concatenate two or more strings.
Eg:
String myname = “Harry”
String str = “My name is” + myname+ “.”;
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CSM-Java Programming-I
Lesson-1
STRING METHODS
Method name
Description
indexOf(str)
index where the start of the given string
appears in this string (-1 if it is not there)
length()
number of characters in this string
substring(index1, index2) the characters in this string from index1
(inclusive) to index2 (exclusive);
or
if index2 omitted, grabs till end of string
substring(index1)
toLowerCase()
a new string with all lowercase letters
toUpperCase()
a new string with all uppercase letters
 These methods are called using the dot notation:
String gangsta = "Dr. Dre";
System.out.println(gangsta.length());
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// 7
STRING METHOD EXAMPLES

String s1 = "Stuart Reges";
String s2 = "Marty Stepp";
System.out.println(s1.length());
System.out.println(s1.indexOf("e"));
System.out.println(s1.substring(7, 10))
// 12
// 8
// "Reg"
String s3 = s2.substring(2, 8);
System.out.println(s3.toLowerCase());
// "rty st"
Given the following string:
//
index 0123456789012345678901
String book = "Building Java Programs";

How would you extract the word "Java" ?

How would you extract the first word from any string?
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SOME COMMONLY USED STRING METHODS
String mystr=new String("programming with Java is fun");
System.out.println(mystr);
System.out.println(mystr.charAt(3));
System.out.println(mystr.indexOf('J'));
System.out.println(mystr.indexOf(‘j'));
programming with Java is fun
g
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-1
Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition
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SOME COMMONLY USED STRING METHODS
Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition
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EXAMPLE
String mystr=new String("programming with Java is fun");
System.out.println(mystr);
System.out.println(mystr.indexOf('a',10));
System.out.println(mystr.indexOf("with"));
System.out.println(mystr.indexOf("ing"));
programming with Java is fun
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MODIFYING STRINGS
 Methods like substring, toLowerCase, etc. create/return
a new string, rather than modifying the current string.
String s = "lil bow wow";
s.toUpperCase();
System.out.println(s);
// lil bow wow
 To modify a variable, you must reassign it:
String s = "lil bow wow";
s = s.toUpperCase();
System.out.println(s);
// LIL BOW WOW
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SOME COMMONLY USED STRING
METHODS
Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition
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EXAMPLES ON STRING METHODS
String s1 , s2 , s3 ;
s1 = “abcdefeg” ;
System.out.println( s1.length() );
// 8
System.out.println(s1.charAt(3));
//d
System.out.println(s1.indexOf(‘e’));
//4
System.out.println(s1.indexOf(“cd”)); //2
System.out.println(s1.toUpperCase()); //ABCDEFEG
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EXAMPLES ON STRING METHODS
System.out.println(s1.substring(1 , 4)); //bcd
System.out.println(s1 + “xyz”); // abcdefegxyz
System.out.println( s1.replace(‘d’ ,’D’)); // abcDefeg
System.out.println(s1.charAt(4) );
// e
System.out.println(s1.indexOf(‘b’));
// 1
System.out.println(s1.indexOf(‘e’,5));
// 6
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CHAR VS. INT
 All char values are assigned numbers internally by the computer, called ASCII
values.


Examples:
'A' is 65,
'B' is 66,
' ' is 32
'a' is 97,
'b' is 98,
'*' is 42
Mixing char and int causes automatic conversion to int.
'a' + 10
is 107,
'A' + 'A'
is 130
CHAR VS. STRING
 "h" is a String
'h' is a char (the two behave differently)
 String is an object; it contains methods
String s = "h";
s = s.toUpperCase();
int len = s.length();
char first = s.charAt(0);
// 'H'
// 1
// 'H'
 char is primitive; you can't call methods on it
char c = 'h';
c = c.toUpperCase();
// ERROR: "cannot be dereferenced"